The play spoke for itself. Sherman was the hero in Seattle. He just made the clutch play to clinch the team's second appearance in the Super Bowl.

But, unfortunately, Sherman then opened his mouth.

After a slap on Crabtree's backside following the interception and a choking signal toward the San Francisco bench, Sherman unleashed a postgame interview with Erin Andrews that will go down in the history books.

Sherman: "Well, I'm the best corner in the game! When you try me with a sorry receiver like Crabtree, that's the result you gonna get! Don't you EVER talk about me."

Andrews: "Who was talking about you?"

Sherman: "Crabtree. Don't you open your mouth about the best. Or I'm gonna shut it for you real quick. L-O-B."

Talk about arrogance. Talk about winning without any class.

It's one thing to share your true feelings on national television, but it's another thing to come across as an extremely cocky player who seems to be more concerned about his individual success than his team making it to the Super Bowl.

And now nobody will be talking about Sherman's amazing play that saved the game for the Seahawks. Instead, it will all be about his postgame interview that looked straight out of pro wrestling.

I think after seeing the young man Mr. Richard Sherman's interview he may have helped a lot of undecided fans head over to the Broncos side.

And he's right. Arrogance usually doesn't sell well with the public. Sherman's postgame rant probably gave some fans a good reason to root for Peyton Manning and the Denver Broncos in two weeks.

Richard Sherman, nobody is denying your talent. You are one of the best cornerbacks in the league. But people can see that with their own eyes watching you play. There's no need to scream your top cornerback ranking into a microphone.